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Rating: Summary: Content counts Review: As Burl Ives once sang, "Watch the donut, not the hole." To put it into this context, focus on what the people on screen are doing and saying and don't get hung up on technical quality. "Thick As Thieves" is a product of early 1970s British television production and is far from pristine in its picture quality. This is true of many British programs of the era, including such milestone series as "Elizabeth R", where the source materials were not as carefully preserved as perhaps they should have been.Like "Elizabeth R", this program has a disclaimer on the packaging about its technical quality. I breezed past that, though, choosing to focus on the treat of seeing John Thaw and Bob Hoskins before they were anybody. Admittedly, there are technical flaws that could be a touch distracting at times if you're obsessive about such things, but if the play's the thing for you, then you're likely to enjoy this release. It has a great premise behind it and wonderful actors carrying it out. Enjoy.
Rating: Summary: Content counts Review: As Burl Ives once sang, "Watch the donut, not the hole." To put it into this context, focus on what the people on screen are doing and saying and don't get hung up on technical quality. "Thick As Thieves" is a product of early 1970s British television production and is far from pristine in its picture quality. This is true of many British programs of the era, including such milestone series as "Elizabeth R", where the source materials were not as carefully preserved as perhaps they should have been. Like "Elizabeth R", this program has a disclaimer on the packaging about its technical quality. I breezed past that, though, choosing to focus on the treat of seeing John Thaw and Bob Hoskins before they were anybody. Admittedly, there are technical flaws that could be a touch distracting at times if you're obsessive about such things, but if the play's the thing for you, then you're likely to enjoy this release. It has a great premise behind it and wonderful actors carrying it out. Enjoy.
Rating: Summary: A comedy team you would never believe! Review: I have an encyclopedia of British television series and notice all the Britcoms that look promising but have never been shown over here to my knowledge. Well, would you believe there is one in which a young Bob Hoskins ("Roger Rabbit") and a not yet white haired John Thaw ("Inspector Morse") play a pair of very inept thieves? There are only eight episodes, mainly because Thaw had other commitments, but what there is ranges from downright silly to genuinely funny and all eight are now available on two DVDs or 3 VHSs, courtesy of Acorn Media. The basic situation of "Thick as Thieves" is that getting out prison a day early, George (Hoskins) returns home to find that his best friend Stan (Thaw) has taken up permanent residence with George's wife Annie (Pat Ashton). A good deal of the plots revolve around the attempts of the three to come to terms with the situation as the wife is the only wage-earner to keep them going. The denouement in the last episode might be predictable (how else to solve the problem?) but the means to it is truly imaginative. Thaw and Hoskins play off one another nicely and make a great comic team. We over here might have some trouble following the East End accents, but the lingo is priceless and a guest appearance by Trevor Peacock (the dithering old man in "The Vicar of Dibley") is an unexpected bonus. Though not exactly as subtle as "Mapp and Lucia" or as sledgehammer as "Fawlty Towers," "Thick as Thieves" will amuse you nevertheless.
Rating: Summary: Very poor transfer Review: The quality of this DVD is terrible. It looks like it was mastered from an old VHS tape with a bad tracking problem.
Rating: Summary: A Rare Treat Review: Wow -- who'd have ever imagined what the world of DVD would bring us. A U.S. release of this more or less forgotten British sitcom. Written by the great Dick Clement & Ian La Frenais, this is not in the same league as their classics THE LIKELY LADS (and especially its sequel series) or PORRIDGE (which THIEVES is something of a dry run for) or AUF WIEDERSEHEN, PET -- but like those landmarks explores with their customary humanity and humor the joys and tribulations of male friendship. The inevitable corollary to this, true or false depending on your point of view (or gender), is that women are portrayed as shrews and spoilsports (or, if you like, simply more sensible and mature), eternal obstacles to our heroes' aspirations. As THIEVES was made for England's commercial channel (ie., the one with commercials, unlike the BBC which aired LADS, PORRIDGE, and latterly PET), it suffers from "high concept" overkill -- a self-consciously and, for the time, risque one-joke premise fairly quickly exhausted (could this be the reason for its limited run?), as well as reduced production values (American viewers will not be used to the British indulgence of actors flubbing lines -- which, in keeping with a theatrical tradition, does give a sort of "live performance" frisson to the proceedings). But what a pair of thesps they found themselves with! Pure pleasure -- especially for those curious to see Bob Hoskins with hair.
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